406 ([return])
[ The book has several times been reprinted. All copies, however, I believe, bear the date 1886. Some bear the imprint "Cosmopoli 1886."
407 ([return])
[ See Chapter xxxii. It may be remembered also that Burton as good as denied that he translated The Priapeia.]
408 ([return])
[ A portion of Miss Costello's rendering is given in the lovely little volume "Persian Love Songs," one of the Bibelots issued by Gay and Bird.]
409 ([return])
[ Byron calls Sadi the Persian Catullus, Hafiz the Persian Anacreon, Ferdousi the Persian Homer.]
410 ([return])
[ Eastwick, p. 13.]